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Vitamins & Nutrients

Vitamin D (25-OH) (25-OH)

The main circulating form of vitamin D — the standard marker for assessing your body's vitamin D status, central to bone strength, immune function, and calcium balance.

SampleBlood (serum) FastingNot required Results1–2 days
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Summary

Vitamin D (measured as 25-hydroxyvitamin D) reflects how much vitamin D your body has stored from sunlight, food, and supplements. It is the single best indicator of your overall vitamin D status and one of the most commonly deficient nutrients in the UK, particularly during winter months.

Vitamin D is essential for absorbing calcium, keeping bones strong, and supporting a healthy immune system. Low levels are extremely common — particularly in people with limited sun exposure, darker skin, or who live at higher latitudes — and are linked to fatigue, bone pain, and frequent illness.nnTesting your 25-OH Vitamin D gives a clear, actionable number you can improve through sunlight, diet, and supplementation, then re-check to confirm you’ve reached the optimal range.

What It Is

Vitamin D is a fat-soluble hormone-like nutrient. Your skin makes it when exposed to UVB sunlight, and smaller amounts come from foods like oily fish, egg yolks, and fortified products. Once produced or ingested, vitamin D is converted by the liver into 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OH D) — the form measured in this test.nnBecause 25-OH D has a long half-life of approximately 2–3 weeks and circulates at relatively stable levels, it provides a reliable snapshot of long-term vitamin D stores. The active form, calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D), is tightly regulated by the kidneys and is not used to assess vitamin D status in most clinical situations.

The active form (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D) is not used to assess vitamin D status in most cases, because the body tightly regulates it even when stores are critically low.

Functions

Bone and calcium balance

Drives calcium and phosphate absorption in the gut to build and maintain strong bones and teeth, preventing osteoporosis and fractures.

Immune system support

Helps regulate innate and adaptive immune cells, supporting defence against infections and maintaining balanced inflammatory responses.

Muscle function

Supports muscle strength and coordination. Deficiency is strongly linked to muscle weakness, cramps, and falls in older adults.

Mood and nervous system

Vitamin D receptors in the brain play a role in mood regulation, serotonin production, and cognitive health — low levels are associated with depression.

Reference Ranges

Serum 25-OH Vitamin D

Measured in nmol/L
Deficient < 30
Insufficient 30–50
Optimal 50–125
High > 125
Status Range (nmol/L) Range (ng/mL) What it means
Deficient < 30 < 12 Significant deficiency — linked to bone loss, muscle weakness, immune impairment, and higher infection risk.
Insufficient 30–50 12–20 Sub-optimal — below the level needed for full physiological benefit; supplementation is typically beneficial.
Optimal 50–125 20–50 Target range for most adults — adequate for bone health, immune function, and overall wellbeing.
High > 125 > 50 Above target — very high levels (>220 nmol/L) risk toxicity including hypercalcaemia.

Reference ranges vary slightly between laboratories. The UK government recommends a minimum of 25 nmol/L to prevent deficiency, with most experts targeting 50–100 nmol/L for optimal health. Always interpret results with your clinician.

Symptoms of Imbalance

Symptoms depend on whether your level is too low (far more common in the UK) or too high from excessive supplementation.

Low — Deficiency
  • Fatigue and persistent low energy
  • Bone pain or tenderness, especially in the back and legs
  • Muscle weakness and cramps
  • Frequent colds, infections, or slow recovery
  • Low mood or seasonal depression
  • Hair thinning
  • Slow wound healing
High — Excess
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Loss of appetite
  • Excessive thirst and frequent urination
  • Constipation
  • Confusion or disorientation
  • Kidney stones (with chronic excess — rare)

Causes of Imbalance

Causes of Low
  • Limited sun exposure and indoor lifestyle
  • Darker skin (more melanin reduces UVB synthesis)
  • Living at higher latitudes (UK)
  • Older age (reduced skin synthesis efficiency)
  • Obesity (vitamin D sequestered in fat tissue)
  • Malabsorption conditions (coeliac, Crohn's, bariatric surgery)
  • Low dietary intake of oily fish, eggs, and fortified foods
Causes of High
  • Excessive vitamin D supplement use (most common cause)
  • Megadose prescriptions without laboratory monitoring
  • Granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis)
  • Some lymphomas
  • Rare genetic conditions affecting vitamin D metabolism

FAQs

If your level is normal and you supplement sensibly, once a year is usually sufficient — ideally in late winter (February–March) when levels are at their seasonal low. If you’re correcting a deficiency, re-test 3 months after starting supplementation to confirm you’ve reached the optimal range before adjusting the dose.

No fasting is required for a vitamin D test. You can eat, drink, and take your supplements as normal before the test.

D3 (cholecalciferol) is the form your skin makes and is generally more effective at raising blood levels than D2 (ergocalciferol). Most UK supplements use D3. This test measures total 25-OH D, capturing contributions from both forms.

Only during the summer months (April–September) when the sun is at sufficient elevation. From October to March, UV-B radiation in the UK is too weak for skin synthesis regardless of time outdoors. Public Health England recommends that everyone in the UK considers a daily supplement of 10 mcg (400 IU) of vitamin D3 throughout autumn and winter.

Yes, though toxicity is rare at standard supplementation doses. Problems arise with very high doses (typically >100 mcg/250 IU per day) taken over extended periods, causing hypercalcaemia. Testing helps you supplement safely and avoid guesswork.

References

  1. Holick MF. Vitamin D deficiency. N Engl J Med. 2007;357(3):266–281. View source
  2. SACN. Vitamin D and Health. Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition report. 2016. View source
  3. Amrein K, et al. Vitamin D deficiency 2.0: an update on the current status worldwide. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2020;74:1498–1513. View source

Last medically reviewed: June 2026 · Reviewed by the Trupoint Health Clinical Team.

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